Teacher’s Bio:

My grandfather was co-founder of the german anthroposophic society where vedic philosophy, meditation and yoga was a key element to a holostic approach to life.

My father was practicing yoga every morning and practically every book in our house had to do with some form of philosophy, psychology, spirituality or arts.

With that kind family influence of course wanted nothing to do with all that ? but as I was trying to learn how to hold my breath for a long time to hang out under water for longer when I was 20, I figured yogis know best. So i went to a pranayama teacher in Greece – from there I found myself in all kinds of yoga teachings, feeling that these practices (asana, breath, concentration, dialogue, dedicated activities of attentiveness, sound, devotion, hanging with likeminded souls) really resonated with me and felt so familiar.

On my path I met many known and unknow knowers of the field, and I always enjoyed spending time with them. All together I trust that your dharma finds you, rather than you go look for the right form of activity.

I teach yoga because it gave me the oppurtunity to emphasize what to my understanding is the most important practice in our time: kindness, nonviolence, the integrity of life and our responsibility to honor that.